Anderson G B, Steinke D E, Petruk K C, Ashforth R, Findlay J M
Division of Neurosurgery, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
Neurosurgery. 1999 Dec;45(6):1315-20; discussion 1320-2. doi: 10.1097/00006123-199912000-00008.
Computed tomographic angiography (CTA) is a rapid and minimally invasive method of detecting intracranial aneurysms. We wished to determine whether CTA could replace digital subtraction angiography (DSA) in the diagnosis and operative planning of ruptured cerebral aneurysms.
In a prospective study, patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage diagnosed by plain computed tomography underwent CTA, DSA, or both. Computed tomographic scans and CTA studies were first reviewed by the treating surgeon, along with a neuroradiologist, and a decision to proceed to DSA or directly to surgery was made on the basis of the type and quality of information provided by CTA. All patients underwent postoperative DSA.
A total of 173 patients were studied. In 24 patients, both CTA and DSA were negative for a source of subarachnoid hemorrhage. Twelve patients underwent DSA without prior CTA because a technologist capable of performing CTA was not available when the patient was evaluated. Nine patients in poor neurological condition underwent CTA, and all tested positive for aneurysms but died without surgical intervention. Of the 126 patients who underwent CTA and surgery, 65 (52%) also required preoperative DSA. The decision to proceed to DSA after CTA was influenced by aneurysm location; posterior communicating artery (62%) and posterior circulation locations (67-75%) more commonly proceeded to DSA than middle cerebral artery aneurysms (34%; 0.025 > P > 0.01). The sensitivity and specificity of CTA for the detection of all aneurysms, ruptured and unruptured, in the group of patients who underwent both types of angiograms preoperatively were 84 and 100%, respectively. In the group of 61 patients in whom aneurysm surgery was performed on the basis of CTA results alone, the sensitivity and specificity for the detection of all aneurysms, as compared with postoperative DSA, were 90 and 100%, respectively. Missed aneurysms (n = 24) were always small (<4 mm) and were usually found in patients with multiple aneurysms in whom the larger, ruptured aneurysm was identified by CTA. In one patient, the aneurysm missed by preoperative CTA would have resulted in a different operation if detected preoperatively.
It is possible to proceed to ruptured aneurysm repair entirely on the basis of good-quality CTA studies that demonstrate an aneurysm consistent with the pattern of bleeding observed on plain computed tomography (48% of the patients in this series and most common middle cerebral artery aneurysms). However, detection of small unruptured aneurysms in patients with multiple lesions remains a problem.
计算机断层血管造影(CTA)是一种快速且微创的检测颅内动脉瘤的方法。我们希望确定CTA是否能在破裂性脑动脉瘤的诊断和手术规划中取代数字减影血管造影(DSA)。
在一项前瞻性研究中,经普通计算机断层扫描诊断为蛛网膜下腔出血的患者接受了CTA、DSA或两者检查。治疗外科医生首先与神经放射科医生一起复查计算机断层扫描和CTA研究结果,并根据CTA提供的信息类型和质量决定是否进行DSA或直接进行手术。所有患者术后均接受DSA检查。
共研究了173例患者。24例患者的CTA和DSA检查均未发现蛛网膜下腔出血的来源。12例患者在未先行CTA的情况下接受了DSA检查,原因是在评估患者时没有能够进行CTA检查的技术人员。9例神经功能状态较差的患者接受了CTA检查,所有患者的动脉瘤检查结果均为阳性,但均未接受手术干预即死亡。在126例接受CTA检查并进行手术的患者中,65例(52%)术前还需要进行DSA检查。CTA检查后决定进行DSA检查受动脉瘤位置的影响;后交通动脉(62%)和后循环部位(67 - 75%)比大脑中动脉动脉瘤(34%;0.025>P>0.01)更常进行DSA检查。在术前接受两种血管造影检查的患者组中,CTA检测所有动脉瘤(破裂和未破裂)的敏感性和特异性分别为84%和100%。在仅根据CTA结果进行动脉瘤手术的61例患者组中,与术后DSA相比,检测所有动脉瘤的敏感性和特异性分别为90%和100%。漏诊的动脉瘤(n = 24)总是较小(<4mm),通常在有多发性动脉瘤的患者中发现,其中较大的破裂性动脉瘤通过CTA得以识别。在1例患者中,如果术前检测到术前CTA漏诊的动脉瘤,手术方式将会不同。
完全基于高质量的CTA研究结果进行破裂性动脉瘤修复是可行的,这些研究结果显示的动脉瘤与普通计算机断层扫描观察到的出血模式一致(本系列中48%的患者,最常见的是大脑中动脉动脉瘤)。然而,在有多发病变的患者中检测小的未破裂动脉瘤仍然是一个问题。